Tales of Space and Time-1


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minds of their ancestors with incredulous amazement. Denton's thoughts  
fluttered towards the future in a vain attempt at what that scene might  
be in another two hundred years, and, recoiling, turned towards the  
past.  
He shared something of the growing knowledge of the time; he could  
picture the quaint smoke-grimed Victorian city with its narrow little  
roads of beaten earth, its wide common-land, ill-organised, ill-built  
suburbs, and irregular enclosures; the old countryside of the Stuart  
times, with its little villages and its petty London; the England of the  
monasteries, the far older England of the Roman dominion, and then  
before that a wild country with here and there the huts of some warring  
tribe. These huts must have come and gone and come again through a space  
of years that made the Roman camp and villa seem but yesterday; and  
before those years, before even the huts, there had been men in the  
valley. Even then--so recent had it all been when one judged it by the  
standards of geological time--this valley had been here; and those hills  
yonder, higher, perhaps, and snow-tipped, had still been yonder hills,  
and the Thames had flowed down from the Cotswolds to the sea. But the  
men had been but the shapes of men, creatures of darkness and ignorance,  
victims of beasts and floods, storms and pestilence and incessant  
hunger. They had held a precarious foothold amidst bears and lions and  
all the monstrous violence of the past. Already some at least of these  
enemies were overcome....  
For a time Denton pursued the thoughts of this spacious vision, trying  
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